by Francesca Prescott
Riding a freestyle to music is something
I’ve always wanted to do. Apart from one unofficial competition years and years
ago, and the hastily improvised program I did with my friend Josephine last November for our stables’
internal competition, I’ve never had the opportunity to ride one. Also, until
last September I wasn’t allowed to ride an official freestyle test as I’d never
passed an exam required in Switzerland to move up to a level where freestyles,
aka Kürs, are offered at competition level.
So I’ve decided that 2015 is going to be
the year of the Kür for Qrac and I. I’m probably completely nuts, as
choreographing a freestyle, finding the right music, and riding everything at
the perfect moment has to be one of the most difficult things to do on
horseback, apart from maybe…well, actually I can’t think of anything more
difficult to do on horseback, but I’m sure there is something. Polo, maybe? I’m
hopeless with balls and clubs and stuff like that.
I think I’ve found my music. I’ve spent
hours and hours (and I seriously mean HOURS AND HOURS) going through on my
computer, listening to the gazillion tracks I have on it, listening to samples of
music online, buying tracks and albums that I think sound promising. I’ve
watched umpteen freestyle videos of superstar riders on Youtube (oh the beauty,
the perfection!), and pulled up recent videos of my horse and I during training
or at shows (oh the evading quarters, the imperfection!), watching them over
and over while playing various tracks. I’ve
been convinced I’ve found something perfect many times, only to change my mind
because I like something else better. Also, depending on how “big” Qrac moves
in trot, the tempo changes, making it hard to decide on a specific track. A
friend filmed my lesson this morning, and Qrac was moving with far more scope
than the previous time my lesson was filmed, so the track I thought too
“big” for him last week seemed perfect today.
I guess I should aim for big, right? I
mean, bigger is better. When it comes to trot, less is definitely not more.
As far as the style of music for my
freestyle, I honestly thought I’d go for something poppy and Latino. When my
friend and I rode our pas-de-deux to the new Ricky Martin track, Adios, late
last year, I was sure I’d choose something in the same vein for my freestyle. But
then I started to feel that using Latino music with a Lusitano horse was way too
cliché, and that it had probably been done to death. Also, when you take the
lyrics out of many top 40-type tracks they tend to sound a little bland, kind
of like elevator or supermarket music. The mega high energy David Guetta/Avicii
-style stuff is cool, but it’s not really Qracy and me. I tried tracks from
musicals, but felt that none-Anglophone judges just wouldn’t connect with the
likes of “Oklahoma!” or “Hair”, and French musicals really don’t do it for me.
Coldplay seemed like a possibility for a
while; I think their riffs are great, but nothing really made me think “that’s
it!”, and surely the judges are sick of Viva la Vida, and Clocks? I liked
Princess of China for the canter, and also because I always feel like a
princess when I’m riding Qracipoo. But I wasn’t totally convinced. And
considering how often I’m going to be listening to this music, I need to be
sure. I need to really love it.
And then I remembered a track I’d seen Carl
Hester ride to at Olympia in London, when I went there just before Christmas
with a girlfriend to watch the Grand Prix and the Freestyle. The particular track is Heart
of Courage by Two Steps from Hell. Carl Hester wasn’t the only rider to feature
this track in his program, and both my girlfriend and I had commented on how
fabulously electrifying it was. I knew it wouldn’t work for Qrac; it's far
too “big” for him, but I thought I might find something that felt similarly
inspirational and epically elevating without being so overpowering.
So I bought a few Two Steps from Hell
albums and had a good listen while fiddling with my training and show videos.
Of course, ITunes helpfully intervened, suggesting that if I liked music by Two
Steps from Hell, I might also like Audiomachine, and being a sucker for their helpful
suggestions, I bought some of those to see if they were right, which they were
to some extent, especially a couple of tracks on the album they composed for
the movie Tree of Life. Still, Two Steps from Hell seems to work best, and after
faffing around on the computer for another gazillion hours I’ve managed to
narrow it down to one track for the canter, three for the trot, and one for the
walk
Anyway, now I need to ride my freestyle
while someone films it, see if the timing is right (not to mention whether
Qracy and I can actually do what we intend to do!). Next, from what I’ve
gathered, I send the video and my music choices to a professional who will lay
down the tracks and edit the music according to the choreography, and then send
me a CD.
And then we ride it to see if it works. If
it does we ride it over and over and over again until we get it all beautiful
and perfect, and we stop falling over our outside shoulder, and losing the
quarters and the bend in the half passes, and the flying changes go through on
cue, and the extended trot flows and we don’t fall on our nose, and we don’t
mistake the wheelbarrow for a giant green fire-breathing dragon.
Will we be ready by April? All we can do is
try. And it’s a fun, exciting, motivating goal to work towards.
Have you ever ridden a freestyle? If you
have, or if you would like to, what type of music would you choose?
I have not ridden Freestyle, Francesca, but you make it sound like so much fun I might want to take it up! You'll have to let us know if Qrac actually feels the music, and starts dancing to it himself.
ReplyDeleteTry Paradise, also from Coldplay, I think it´s great!
ReplyDeleteThank you Linda :) Qrac seemed to get quite into the Ricky Martin track we did the pas-de-deux to before Christmas, the tempo fit perfectly. I'll definitely keep you posted.
ReplyDeleteAnonymous: yep, Paradise was on my list too, it sort of worked for the walk. Strawberry Swing worked better though :) Love Coldplay, saw them in concert a few years ago during a thunderstorm in Bern. Was amazing!
I'd love to ride to Burn, by Ellie Goulding. And if I could figure out how to make I Give Up, by Elijah Bossenbroek, work, for any gait, I would totally ride to that.
ReplyDeleteAnd if those fail, I'm all over Nine Inch Nails. Because nobody else will ever ride a freestyle to NIN. ;)